de Lange v. United States

76 Cust. Ct. 33, 1976 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1081
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1976
DocketC.D. 4631; Court Nos. 69/7589, etc.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 Cust. Ct. 33 (de Lange v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Customs Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
de Lange v. United States, 76 Cust. Ct. 33, 1976 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1081 (cusc 1976).

Opinion

He, Judge:

The question presented in this case pertains to the dutiable status, for tariff purposes, of certain merchandise imported by plaintiff from Holland in 1967 and 1968. The merchandise, consisting of grain, was invoiced as “quick cooking pearl barley.” It was classified by the Customs Service under item 131.12 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States (TSUS) as milled “barley: other” .fit for human consumption, and assessed with duty at 2 cents per spound.

Plaintiff challenges the classification and claims, alternatively, that ‘the merchandise is properly classifiable either as “pearl barley” mnder item 131.10, TSUS, or as “cereal breakfast foods and similar xereal preparations” under item 182.30, TSUS. Under the claimed provisions, “pearl barley” carries a duty rate of 0.4 cents per pound, and “cereal breakfast foods and similar cereal preparations” are dutiable at a rate of either 4 or 5 percent ad valorem, depending upon the date of entry.

The pertinent tariff provisions read as follows:

Schedule 1, part 7, subpart B:
“Subpart B. - Milled Grain Products
Subpart B headnote:
1. The term “milled grain products,” as used in this subpart, embraces flours, grits, groats, meal, flaked or rolled grains, and other products, all the foregoing, whether or not fit for human consumption, made or derived from the grains named in subpart [35]*35A of tins part by grinding, crushing, breaking, rolling, flaking, pearling, polishing, or similar milling processes, but does not include by-products or wastes resulting from any of these processes.
Milled grain products:
Fit for human consumption: Barley:
[Claimed] 131.10 Pearl barley_ 0.4¡í per lb.
[Classified] 131.12 Other_ 2£perlb.”
Schedule 1, part 15, subpart B:
“Subpart B. - Edible Preparations
Subpart B headnotes:
1. This subpart covers preparations fit for human consumption not provided for. elsewhere in schedule 1.
[Claimed]
182.30 Cereal breakfast foods and similar cereal preparations, by whatever name known, processed further than milling--
5% ad val. [or] 4% ad val. [T.D. 68-9]”

The merchandise in the present case has been the subject of prior customs litigation by the same plaintiff-importer. See M. L. de Lange v. United States, 62 Cust. Ct. 17, C.D. 3665, 294 F. Supp. 646 (1969) decided by Judge Kichardson. In that case, identical or almost identical merchandise was classified, as in the present case, under item 131.12 of the tariff schedules. Plaintiff claimed it was dutiable as pearl barley under item 131.10 of the tariff schedules (having failed properly to file his alternative claim for classification under item 182.30 of the tariff schedules as a cereal preparation).

It was plaintiff's contention that the merchandise was pearl barley which, after pearling, was subjected to additional processing involving rolling or pressing in order to shorten the cooking time. The imported grains, which plaintiff conceded were not in pellet form, were flat and circular in shape — the result, he claimed, of the additional rolling or pressing operation.

Plaintiff maintained that the merchandise was pearl barley for tariff purposes regardless of the additional processing, shape, or size of the grain. He claimed that, whereas “pearl barley” was formerly recognized as having a ball or pellet shape, the term now applies to “broken pieces” and other shapes.- On the ground that plaintiff had [36]*36failed to.overcome the presumption of correctness that attached to the classification of the customs officials, the defendant offered no evidence.

In rejecting plaintiff’s claim, the court cited various lexicographic authorities and the Summary <ff Tariff Information, 1929 (a Tariff Commission publication prepared for congressional use on the bill subsequently enacted as the Tariff Act of 1930) all of which defined pearl barley as barley ground into small round grains or pellets. The court stated:

“From the foregoing definitions of pearl barley it is clear that a particular form of the barley kernel or grain, namely, round or ball shaped, is the quintessence of the nomenclature identifying the article from the standpoint of common usage of the term prior to the enactment of the Tariff Schedules of the United States in 1963. And nothing in the explanatory notes to the Tariff Classification Studies of 1960 pertaining to item 131.10 of the then proposed tariff schedules suggests any congressional intent to deviate from the common meaning of the term ‘pearl barley’ under prior tariff provisions therefor. * * *” 62 Oust. Ct. at 19.

Referring to the long-standing principle of customs law that the common meaning of a tariff term is presumed to be the same as its commercial meaning, unless the contrary is shown, the court noted that plaintiff offered no evidence to establish a commercial designation for the merchandise consistent with his claimed classification. Accordingly, the government’s classification of the merchandise was sustained on the ground that there was a total failure of proof to support plaintiff’s claim.

In the case at bar, plaintiffs submits the same arguments made in the prior case in support of his claim for classification under item .131.10 of the tariff schedules. In his brief he asserts that the “existing” standard for pearl barley is one which includes barley in various shapes, replacing the “antiquated” standard which limited that term to barley having a ball shape. This contention was considered and explicitly decided in the prior de Lange case. After studying the record in this case and the incorporated record of the prior case, the court is not persuaded that the holding in the prior case, with respect to the common meaning of “pearl barley,” is in error. The court agrees -with the findings made in the prior case that the merchandise, in Its imported form and condition, was not commonly known as “pearl barley,” and that to come within the common understanding of that term, a small ball or pellet shape is a sine qua non of the article. Indeed, the 1966 edition of Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged, defines pearl barley as “barley ground into small round pellets.”

[37]*37Plaintiff relies upon the following statement in the Summaries of Trade and Tariff Information, 1966, Schedule 1, Volume 6, page 93:

“Pearl barley is made by placing large-kerneled, whole grain in a revolving perforated cylinder with abrasive disks. During the process of pearling, the hull and the bran are removed, and the whole grain is reduced to small round pellets known as white pearl barley. Pellets with some of the bran intact are known as brown pearl barley or pot barley. The further milling of white pearl barley reduces the product to flour.”

It is to be noted that the quoted comment was written after the adoption of the TSUS in 1963, and thus cannot be considered as revealing the congressional intent at the time of the enactment of the tariff schedules.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Cust. Ct. 33, 1976 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-lange-v-united-states-cusc-1976.